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Dodging Baseball's Good Graces

Friday, March 20, 2009

Although Walter O'Malley has been dead for nearly 30 years his, the former Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers owner is still one of the most controversial persons ever associated with the sport. Michael D’Antonio's exhaustive biography of O’Malley is called Forever Blue.

Event: Michael D'Antonio will be in conversation with Walter O'Malley's son Peter, moderated by Richard Sandomir of the New York Times
Saturday, March 21, at 1:00 pm
Brooklyn Historical Society
128 Pierrepont Street, Brooklyn


Comments

  • [1] Bobby G from East Village March 20, 2009 - 11:29AM

    My Father, who was born in LA in the 1920's, hated O'Malley because the City of LA gave away for nothing some of the most valuable land near downtown to the Dodgers for their stadium.


  • [2] JOHN from PARAMUS, NJ March 20, 2009 - 12:33PM

    ISN"T TRUE THAT ITS REALLY ROBERT MOSES FAULT

    THAT THE DODGERS MOVED

    JOHN


  • [3] JOHN from PARAMUS, NJ March 20, 2009 - 12:38PM

    BUT THEY COULD NEVER BEAT THE YANKEES!!!


  • [4] Paul from New York March 20, 2009 - 12:59PM

    Ry Cooder's excellent concept album "Chavez Ravine" is a multi-layered narrative about the neighborhood wiped out by Dodger Stadium -- highly recommended. Certainly a critical point of view, but also, as one expects from Cooder, a very moving and fun musical education with lots of cameos and collaborators. Cooder notes that people from the neighborhood learned to tell where they had lived by referring to the stadium's overlaid structure -- "I'm from third base," etc.


  • [5] NABNYC from Southern California March 20, 2009 - 01:00PM

    My mother was the child of Irish immigrants, raised in Manhattan, and a Brooklyn Dodgers' fan. She was also a skinny and pretty girl and later woman, and of course back then women did not "follow" sports or certainly play any of them, so she was a fairly dainty, delicate, and lady-like person.

    Until Opening Day, that is. Because once baseball season began, my mother abandoned her floral-print blouses and skirts and replaced them with casual tops and pants that would match her Dodgers Hat. Which she even wore inside the house.

    Once of my constant childhood memories is of my mother with her Dodger hat on, listening to a game on the radio, and ironing. It was such a contradiction in some ways, but the Dodgers were simply burned into her DNA and heart. The Brooklyn Bums. They may have been bums, but they were her bums.


  • [6] Eric Tremont from Berkeley CA March 20, 2009 - 05:12PM

    Henry D. Fetter has written the definitive history of the Brooklyn Dodgers move to Los Angeles.


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